ZinskI/E
Member
- Location
- New Orleans, LA
This may not be directly related to the hazardous area section of the forum, but based on the numerous postings of the experts here, I am hoping for a bit of insight or experience...
At the refinery in which I work, a 13.8kV Westinghouse tie breaker experienced a catastrophic fault (of unknown origin) resulting in significant damage to the busswork, pitting and fouling of the enclosure, and excessive carbon deposits on the insulators, bushings, bussing...basically anything within the affected section of the gear (and even some adjacent). Some parts were correctly deemed un-reusable, others were to be cleaned and returned to service.
Unfortunately, I was assigned cleaning duty. While I understand the utmost importance of cleanliness in MV gear, I am having trouble accepting that denatured alcohol is the only permissible cleaning solution on or near the current carrying components.
I agree that the alcohol should be the final step to remove any conductive films or residues, but can anyone provide reason why any non-corrosive cleaning assortment should/could not be used before the final clean?
Speaking from recent and painful experience, fast evaporating alcohol does not a good cleaner make.
An aside: can anyone recommend a tool or material to clean the many crevices in such a piece of gear while avoiding the surface scarring that leads to tracking?
At the refinery in which I work, a 13.8kV Westinghouse tie breaker experienced a catastrophic fault (of unknown origin) resulting in significant damage to the busswork, pitting and fouling of the enclosure, and excessive carbon deposits on the insulators, bushings, bussing...basically anything within the affected section of the gear (and even some adjacent). Some parts were correctly deemed un-reusable, others were to be cleaned and returned to service.
Unfortunately, I was assigned cleaning duty. While I understand the utmost importance of cleanliness in MV gear, I am having trouble accepting that denatured alcohol is the only permissible cleaning solution on or near the current carrying components.
I agree that the alcohol should be the final step to remove any conductive films or residues, but can anyone provide reason why any non-corrosive cleaning assortment should/could not be used before the final clean?
Speaking from recent and painful experience, fast evaporating alcohol does not a good cleaner make.
An aside: can anyone recommend a tool or material to clean the many crevices in such a piece of gear while avoiding the surface scarring that leads to tracking?